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Japan Executes First Foreigner in 10 Years

Photo: Masako Mori, Japan’s justice minister, speaks at a news conference after the execution of 40-year-old Wei Wei on Thursday. “It was an extremely cold-blooded and cruel case, in which (Wei) killed four innocent members of a happy family,” she said. (Associated Press)

Chinese national Wei Wei was hanged after being on death row for more than 16 years for robbing and murdering a family of four in 2003.

Japan has executed its first foreigner in 10 years, a Chinese man convicted over the 2003 murder and robbery of a family of four.

Wei Wei, 40, was hanged on Thursday at a detention centre in Fukuoka, where he had been on death row for more than 16 years, Justice Minister Masako Mori said.

Wei was convicted of robbing and killing a clothing store owner and his wife and two children at their home in Fukuoka.

He and two Chinese accomplices dumped the bodies into the sea after attaching weights to them, Ms Mori said at a news conference.

Japan has maintained the death penalty despite growing international criticism.

Ms Mori said she signed the execution order after careful examination, taking into consideration the international anti-execution movement.

She said Japan is a law-abiding country and the execution was based on its criminal justice system.

“It was an extremely cold-blooded and cruel case, in which (Wei) killed four innocent members of a happy family,” she said.

Wei’s two accomplices were tried in China, where one was sentenced to death and the other was given life imprisonment, according to Japan’s Kyodo News agency.

Japan and the US are the only two countries in the Group of Seven advanced nations that retain the death penalty. A survey by the Japanese government showed an overwhelming majority of the public supports executions.

Japan now has 112 people on death row, including 84 seeking retrials, according to the justice ministry.

Executions are carried out in high secrecy in Japan, where prisoners are not informed of their fate until the morning they are hanged.

Since 2007, Japan has begun disclosing the names of those executed and some details of their crimes, but disclosures are still limited.

Since Prime Minister Shinzo Abe returned to power in 2012, his government has executed 39 people.

Last year, Japan hanged 15 people, including the guru of the Aum Shinrikyo cult and 12 former followers convicted over a deadly Tokyo subway gas attack.

Some politicians, including governing party members who oppose executions, recently launched a group to promote public discussion of the death penalty.

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Copyright 2019 SIGNAL. Permission to use portions of this article is granted provided appropriate credits are given to www.signalng.com and other relevant source.

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